This is true- summer and fall are great up there but DC typically has a better, longer spring. |
If that's a dealbreaker, would you consider living in one of the eastern burbs of Rochester instead? Would you have jobs in Canandaigua that necessitate you living there? Something like Penfield, Fairport would not be that far but a slightly different vibe politically (and good schools). Just a thought. |
|
OP - you do you. I know people (not farmers) who live on farms and their kids (especially as they get older) get ATVs free roam around the farm. However, it is also very isolating and the kids can't do things like walk to friends (parents drive everywhere). Also, your farming neighbors are not going to be particularly welcoming to you.
If you grew up in the Finger Lakes, you know what you are getting into. Personally, I find it feels economically depressed and that many of the youths move away, so it feels like there are more retirees than families with kids. |
|
No, but I am a city person at heart. I'd go out of my mind.
I thought about moving to a small town that I love in Vermont, but realized I could only do it a few months out of the year tops. I need the hustle and bustle, my boutique exercise studios, walking to restaurants, events, etc. The thought of it was much more attractive than the reality of it for me. Vacation is one thing. Living and raising kids another. I like that my kids can knock on doors and have a million kids their age to hang out with. They are now teens. They take the Metro (we live close-in NoVA), and can walk to summer jobs, have TONS of sports team options. Both play on competitive teams that just would not happen in a rural area. |
You're living in the Finger Lakes for your DS who got into a NE boarding school but won't board? WTH? Can't really think of any top boarding schools within commuting distance to NY. Let's see: Andover Exeter Deerfield Hotchkiss St Paul Hmm. |
It's all food except the first. My ex is from the area, and he always said it had 4 great seasons: June, July, August and winter. Utica is an awful place, really downtrodden and sad. It always depressed me to go there. |
| Canandaigua hometowner here and agree that the political vibe is probably better in Victor/Fairport than Canandaigua. Also, the prior poster is right that there’s a lot of economic diversity in Canandaigua that impacts the schools (which are still very good). To the posters imagining this rural, isolating town, that’s not at all what Canandaigua is like. There isn’t as much to do for sure, but it’s not a tiny town and the schools are centralized so I had more classmates than my kids do in MoCo. |
Oh wow. But so true. DS was recruited to play hockey at Hamilton. Spent a few weeks there 2 summers in a row, and promptly went elsewhere. Great school but everything around it was (is) really depressing. |
I'm not sure that's a positive? |
Not PP but I think the point is that some posters clearly have no idea what Canandaigua is like at all. It’s not a rural backwater. |
Meaning graduating class size... not individual classes. Point being it isn't a tiny, isolating town. |
|
I spent a year living in Geneseo and I would never move there. The biggest down side for me was actually the weather. It is cold and miserable for 5-6 months of the year. It's basically a toss up weather a given day is sunny or has rain/snow (by contrast, DC is closer to 2-to-1 ratio-wise). The weather was especially miserable there because all of the fun activities were outdoors. Winter there just sucked.
FWIW it's not really Trump country though, except compared to DC. It's about evenly split. So unless you strongly prefer living in the bubble (which, I sort of do, but 50-50 wouldn't be a deal-breaker for me), I don't think it would be a decisive factor. |
| PP here. *whether a given day. Wow. Funny screw-up given the subject matter though. |
This sounds like a DP to me and I imagine they're moving to a rural area or small town in New England instead. |